UNBIASED - August 7, 2024: An Edit To Walz's Military Record, Why Some Republicans Are Calling Walz 'Tampon Tim,' RFK Jr.'s NY Lawsuit Explained, Biden Sued By U.S.-Israeli Citizens, and More.
Episode Date: August 7, 20241. Edits to Yesterday's Episode: Clarifying Walz's Service Overseas Post 9/11 and Explaining the Nickname He's Been Given By Republicans (0:34)2. RFK Jr. Spends His Week in Court After Facing Lawsuit ...Over NY Residency and NY Ballot Access (5:47)3. Quick Hitters: Biden Facing Lawsuit From U.S.-Israeli Dual Citizens, Boeing Exec Testifies Before Congress, Harvard Antisemitism Lawsuit Allowed to Proceed, Ohio Judge Upholds Gender Transition Law, Minnesota Judge Upholds Gov. Walz's Right to Vote Law (11:10)Support ‘UNBIASED’ on Patreon.Watch this episode on YouTube.Follow Jordan on Instagram and TikTok.All sources for this episode can be found here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Kick off an exciting football season with BetMGM,
an official sportsbook partner of the National Football League.
Yard after yard, down after down,
the sportsbook born in Vegas gives you the chance to take action to the end zone
and celebrate every highlight reel play.
And as an official sportsbook partner of the NFL,
BetMGM is the best place to fuel your football fandom on every game day.
With a variety of exciting features,
BetMGM offers you plenty of seamless ways to jump straight onto the gridiron
and to embrace peak sports action.
Ready for another season of gridiron glory?
What are you waiting for?
Get off the bench, into the huddle, and head for the end zone all season long.
Visit BetMGM.com for terms and conditions.
Must be 19 years of age or older.
Ontario only. Please gamble responsibly. Gambling problem? For free assistance,
call the Conax Ontario helpline at 1-866-531-2600. BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement
with iGaming Ontario. Welcome back to Unbiased, your favorite source of unbiased news and legal analysis.
Welcome back to Unbiased. Today is Wednesday, August 7th, and this is your daily news rundown.
As always, if you love the unbiased approach that this episode provides, you feel more informed
after listening, please go ahead and leave my show a review on whatever platform you listen,
share the show with your friends, and if you're watching on YouTube, please go ahead and hit that thumbs up button
and subscribe to the channel. If you're not already, all of those things really help me out,
help me grow. So thank you very much. And without further ado, we can get into today's stories.
In yesterday's episode, I spoke at great lengths about Governor Tim Walz and some of his policies
and actions in office to give you a good
idea about what, you know, what he stands for. After that episode was recorded, there were some
new pieces of information that came out, so I wanted to include those for you just so you're
as informed as possible. Now, before I get into it, I realized that talking about Walz and his
policies and really any politician or candidate for that matter, sort of makes a listener's bias radar turn on. Last night when I posted the clip about Walls,
specifically on immigration, I had people from the right and the left coming at me. People on
the right were accusing me of being biased because I left out his stance on too many other topics.
People on the left were accusing me of being biased because I only touched on immigration.
Clearly, none of those people actually took the time to read the caption of that post,
which stated that my podcast episode touched on many, many, many more topics other than
immigration. But the reason that I tell you this is because I know this is a bit of a sensitive
topic. It's a little bit touchy. And you guys, my podcast listeners, are amazing. I truly believe,
I tell everyone this. I tell everyone that my podcast listeners specifically are the most
rational and level-headed of all of my followers. I think you guys are just like a lot more
committed to the unbiased practice and approach. But anyway, I say this because it's not necessarily
you that's the problem, but I did want to issue this reminder before I get into the story that my job is to tell all sides of the story.
That has been my mission since day one.
That'll always be my mission.
Sure, you can listen to what I'm about to say and call me biased for mentioning it in
the first place, but the reality is if I didn't mention it, then I would be biased for not
mentioning it.
So I'm here to give you all of the facts.
Just keep that in mind.
With that said, yesterday,
I spoke a lot about Walls, his policies, and his background, but I specifically spoke about his
time with the National Guard. And I mentioned how he spent 24 years as an enlisted soldier with the
National Guard, which he did. And I said that after 9-11, he was deployed overseas. And that was a little bit misleading.
So here's the full story. Walls did serve overseas with the National Guard post 9-11,
but it was in Italy in 2003. He also served in Norway. When it came to serving overseas post
9-11 in Iraq, he did not do that. He actually retired from the National Guard after learning
that his battalion was being deployed. According to
former members of his battalion, Walls told his troops that he would be joining them in Iraq when
they were deployed, but when it actually came time to do so in 2005, he did not. He instead ran for
Congress. And this lines up with his biography because we know that he was first elected to the
House in 2006, and he himself told Minnesota Public Radio that he never saw
active combat in his years in the military. In a 2018 letter written by a retired command sergeant
when Governor Tim Walz was first running for governor in Minnesota, he wrote in part, quote,
on May 16, 2005, Wals quit, betraying his country,
leaving his battalion and its soldiers hanging, end quote. And in fact, it was actually Walls
himself who was supposed to act as the command sergeant in Iraq, but when he retired, the man
who wrote that letter ended up taking Walls' place. During the 2022 Minnesota governor's race, Walls' opponent actually raised the fact that
Walls left the National Guard when he did in order to avoid deployment, and Walls rebutted that by
saying he retired to focus on running for Congress. The second question related to Walls that I wanted
to clear up is why he's been given the nickname Tampon Tim by Republicans. A lot of
you messaged me last night wanting the story on this and whether there's any validity to this
claim that he gave tampons to boys. So here's the story. Under his governance, Minnesota enacted a
law which in part set forth the legal requirements for access to menstrual products. And what that
law says is, quote, a school district or charter school must provide students with access to menstrual products. And what that law says is, quote, a school district
or charter school must provide students with access to menstrual products at no charge. The
products must be available to all menstruating students in restrooms regularly used by students
in grades four to 12, according to a plan developed by the school district. End quote. Under that law, menstrual products means pads,
tampons, or other similar products used in connection with the menstrual cycle. So given
the broad language of that statute, that being the law referring to quote-unquote all menstruating
students in any restroom, people argue that that allows tampons to be put in boys' bathrooms. And yes, under this
law, if there is a biological female that menstruates but identifies as a male and uses a
bathroom designated for boys, then by law, that person is entitled to access to tampons in that
boys' bathroom. So that's the backstory behind the nickname, And now we can move on to the next story, which is about Robert F. Kennedy Jr. RFK Jr., the independent presidential candidate,
has spent his week testifying in a New York courtroom over accusations that he's not
actually a New York resident and therefore cannot be on the state's ballot due to misrepresentations
on his petition. So let's
break this down. This lawsuit, first and foremost, was filed by four private voters, four individuals
in New York. The lawsuit alleges that Kennedy deliberately lied on the independent nominating
petition to get him on the ballot in the state of New York by listing an address in New York.
Now, he wasn't required to list an address in New York. He just did that. The lawsuit says this
address is not actually Kennedy's address because Kennedy actually lives with his wife in California.
Instead, the address that Kennedy listed is the address of a friend of his where he has visited.
And the reason that Kennedy did this, according to the suit, is because his vice president, Nicole Shanahan, is also from California. As we've talked about before,
the 12th Amendment tells us that electors cannot cast ballots for two candidates from the same
state. So if they are both from California, they'd run into some 12th Amendment issues.
Kennedy, though, says this decision to list the New York address was one that he made with his lawyers, and the fact that he receives mail in New York, his driver's license
is registered there, his car is registered there, and his voting registration is from there,
all of those things factored into the decision to list New York as his residence. He acknowledges
that he doesn't own the property listed in the petition, but according to him, this was a lose-lose situation either way. He says if he would have put his California address,
he would have been challenged on that too, given his ties to New York. In court and through
testimony this week from both the property owner and Kennedy himself, we have learned that Kennedy
rents a room from the property owner for $500 a month, but that those rent payments only
began one day after a news article questioned Kennedy's claim that he lived in New York.
And at the same time, Kennedy also wrote a check for $6,000 for one year in back rent.
There is no written lease, according to the property owner, but the understanding between
the two was that, quote, as long as Bobby needs the room, it will continue, end quote.
Kennedy testified that he moved out to California from New York to support his wife, who's an
actress, but that once she's done acting, they have both agreed that they'll move back
to New York City full time.
He said he's always kept his New York residence, the residence in question here, because he
loves New York, that it's a part of who he is, and that it was important for him to keep.
Now, you might be wondering, can't he just move to New York and avoid all of these problems?
Yes.
After all, that is what we saw Dick Cheney do when he ran with George W. Bush.
They were both from Texas.
Dick Cheney switched his residence to Wyoming.
Sure.
He can certainly change his residency to New York at any given time. Why he hasn't done that, I'm not entirely sure. Maybe because he's already used his California
address on a variety of other federal election forms, but I don't have the answer to that.
It could also be seen as maybe some sort of admission of guilt if he were to do it now,
but I don't know for sure. Regardless, though, of why he put the New York address as his
address on his nominating petition, the plaintiffs are arguing that all of the signatures on the
petition, roughly 102,000, should now be invalidated, which means that if it were invalidated,
he would not appear on New York's state ballot. Because to appear on New York's state ballot,
you have to meet certain requirements. And in New York, as an independent candidate, you have to receive at least 45,000 signatures.
With zero signatures, you're obviously ineligible for the ballot. So that is the goal of this
lawsuit. A little bit of the behind the scenes facts that are worth noting. These four individuals
that filed the suit are reportedly being backed by a Democratic PAC called Clear Choice, which is
funded in part by a man named Reid Hoffman, who happens to be, yes, the co-founder of LinkedIn,
but also the man who funded E. Jean Carroll's lawsuit against Trump. Now, at the end of the
day, this case is really going to come down to whether the judge determines that Kennedy has a
lawful residence in New York. Because legally, under
state law, you're allowed to leave the state of New York for work and still be considered a resident.
And you only have to be at that residence for roughly 180 days out of the year. But whether
this New York property can be considered his lawful residence for purposes of the election
will be a question for the judge. At this point in Kennedy's campaign,
he has officially made it onto the ballot in seven states, Utah, Michigan, California, Delaware,
Oklahoma, Hawaii, and Texas. And in another nine states, he says he's met the requirements but
isn't yet on the ballot. Those states are New Hampshire, Nevada, North Carolina, Idaho,
Nebraska, Iowa, Ohio, New Jersey, and New York. It's also worth
noting before we move into quick hitters is that Kennedy is also facing a second lawsuit in New
York over the actual signatures on the petition. Those who sued him are claiming that he obtained
the signatures without telling the signers what they were signing. But Kennedy says
all of these lawsuits are just attempts to keep him off the ballot. Okay, now let's finish with
some quick hitters. The first one, the Biden administration is facing a lawsuit from pro-Israel
advocacy groups and dual U.S.-Israeli citizens over Biden's recent order imposing financial
and immigration sanctions on individuals involved in settler violence in the West Bank. So the West Bank is one of two Palestinian territories within Israel,
the other being Gaza, and Biden's order was an attempt to prevent what's called settler violence,
which is when settlers within these territories attack those living there. Biden's order called
for both immigration and financial sanctions on Israeli
settlers who partake in violence against the Palestinians living in the West Bank. The
plaintiffs, though, say that this order violates their free speech rights and illegally interferes
with the exercise of religious beliefs. Boeing and Spirit Aerosystems entered their second day
of testimony today in front of Congress over the January Alaska Airlines door plug incident. The senior vice president of quality for Boeing testified
that it's not clear who and when the door plug was put in place. She said the door plug was removed
at the Boeing factory in Renton, Washington last September so that some problems with some rivets
could be repaired. However, at that time, the requisite paperwork
for the door plug removal was never created. Consequently, when workers replaced the door
plug temporarily, other workers were unaware that bolts needed to be reinstalled.
A federal judge in Boston ruled that Harvard must face a lawsuit over anti-Semitism on campus.
Harvard had tried to get this suit
dismissed, but in a new ruling, the judge said that the Jewish students had plausibly claimed,
which by the way is the legal standard for filing a claim or a lawsuit, you just have to submit a
plausible claim, but that the students had plausibly claimed Harvard had been indifferent
to their fears of walking through campus and missing classes when they were allegedly harassed
by pro-Palestinian protesters. Consequently, because the judge found the claim to be plausible,
Harvard's motion to dismiss was denied, and this doesn't mean that Harvard lost the suit on the
merits, it just means that this case can now proceed through litigation. A county court judge
in Ohio upheld Ohio's state law banning transition-related
care, such as puberty blockers and hormones for transgender minors. Originally, the judge had put
the law on hold while he heard and decided the merits of the case, but today he issued his ruling
and said that the state of Ohio had a legitimate interest in passing the law because the treatments at issue carry, quote,
undeniable risk and permanent outcomes, end quote. The ACLU of Ohio has said that they will appeal
this ruling. And in some other state news, the Minnesota Supreme Court upheld a law enacted by
Governor Tim Walz that restores the right to vote for felons who have completed their prison terms.
However, rather than addressing the actual merits of the lawsuit at hand, the panel of judges unanimously held that the group challenging
Walz's law did not have the requisite standing to do so. So Minnesota now joins many other states
that allow felons to vote upon completion of their sentence. That is what I have for you today. Thank
you so much for being here. Have a fantastic night and I will be back
tomorrow for the final news rundown of the week.